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Excellence"address to the Aviation Hall of Fame Induction Dinner,
Cleveland, Ohio, 4 September 1981. Text in Air Force Policy Letter for
Commanders, Sup 2, 1981, 12-15.
26. Gen David C. Jones, Air Force Chief of Staff, quoted in "The Quiet
Revolution in USAF s Capabilities," Edgar Ulsamer, ed., Air Force
Magazine, September 1975, 39.
27. Maj Dennis W. Stiles, USAF, "Air Power: A New Look From and Old
Rooftop," Air University Review, November - December 1975, 57.
28. ibid.
29. Robert A. Gessert, "The Airland Battle and NATO s New Doctrinal
Debate," RUSI J for Def Studies 129, June 1984, 54.
30. Stiles, 50.
31. ibid, p 52.
32. Drew, "Two Decades in the Air Power Wilderness," 11.
33. ibid.
34. Robert Frank Futrell, Ideas, Concepts, Doctrine: Basic Thinking in
the United States Air Force, 1961-1984 (Maxwell AFB, Ala.: Air
University Press, 1989), 728.
xxxix
35. Drew, "Two Decades in the Air Power Wilderness," 12.
36. ibid.
37. Lt Andrew D. Dembosky, "Meeting the Challenge: United States Air
Force Basic Doctrine Through 1992" (Master s thesis, North Carolina
State University, 1993).
38. Editorial, "Unfinished Business," 2.
39. General Donn A. Starry, "Extending the Battlefield", Military
Review, 8 March 1981, 70.
40. John L. Romjue, "The Evolution of the AirLand Battle Concept," Air
University Review, May-June 1984, 8-9. In a carefully orchestrated
campaign TRADOC presented briefings on the AirLand Battle concept and
AirLand Battle 2000 studies to Pentagon action officers from both
services, DOD civilian personnel including the Under Secretaries of
Defense, service chiefs and their deputies, members of Congress and
finally to Vice President George Bush.
41. Stiles, 57; Maj Donald J. Alberts, "A Call From the Wilderness,"
Air University Review November - December 1976): 35; Col Robert D.
Rasmussen, "The Central Europe Battlefield: Doctrinal Inplications for
Counterair -Interdiction," Air University Review, July - August 1978,
11; Steven L. Canby, "Tactical Air Power in Armored Warfare -- The
Divergence Within Nato," Air University Review, May - June 1979, 2-20;
Charles Gilson, "Can the A-10 Thunderbolt II Survive in Europe?"
International Defense Review, No. 2, 1979): 184-189.
42. Stiles, 59.
43. John L. Romjue, From Active Defense to AirLand Battle: The
Development of Army Doctrine 1973-1982, TRADOC Historical Monograph
Series (Fort Monroe, Virginia: Historical Office, United States Army
Training and Doctrine Command, June 1984), 61.
44. TAC-TRADOC ALFA Air Land Bulletin, 19 July 1979, 18.
45. ibid, 7.
46. TAC-TRADOC ALFA Air Land Bulletin, 20 April 1981, 5.
47. Romjue, From Active Defense to AirLand Battle, 64; TAC-TRADOC ALFA
Air Land Bulletin, 25
Sep 81, p 5.
48. ibid.
49. F. Clifton Berry Jr., ed., "USAF Doctrine Comes Alive," Air Force
Magazine, July 1983, 35.
50. Richard G. Davis, The 31 Initiatives, Air Staff Historical Study
(Washington, D.C.: Office of Air Force History, 1987), appendix 1,
91-92.
51. TAC-TRADOC ALFA Air Land Bulletin, 28 May 84, p 11. See also
Davis, 47.
52. Col Thomas A. Cardwell, "One Step Beyond -- AirLand Battle,
Doctrine not Dogma," Military Review, April 1984, 45-53; Col Thomas A.
Cardwell, "Extending the Battlefield: An Airman s Point of View," Air
University Review, March - April, 1983, 86-93; Maj James A. Machos,
"TACAIR Support For AirLand Battle," Air University Review, May-June
1984, 18; Maj James A. Machos, "Air-Land Battles or AirLand Battle?"
Military Review, July 1983, 38-39; Gen Merrill A. McPeak, "TACAIR
Missions and the Fire Support Coordination Line," Air University
Review, September - October 1985, 65-72; Tidal W. McCoy, " Full Strike
-- The Myths and Realities of AirLand Battle," Armed Forces Journal,
International, June 1984, 78+.
53. Romjue, From Active Defense to AirLand Battle, 65.
xl
54. Maj James A. Machos, USAF, "TACAIR Support For AirLand Battle," Air
University Review, May-June 1984, 19.
55. Army corps commanders in Europe first identified the necessity to
strike Soviet and Warsaw Pact second echelon forces in 1977. By 1979,
the concept of BAI was created and the procedures for direction and
control of BAI assets were developed jointly by NATO s Central Army
Group and 4th Allied Tactical Air Force. In 1979 Allied Air Forces
Central Europe put the new term and principles into its 80-2 manual,
Offensive Air Support. Later TAC-TRADOC agreements deviated little from
the guidance contained in this manual. John L. Romjue, From Active
Defense to AirLand Battle, 62.
56. Maj James A. Machos, USAF, "Air-Land Battles or AirLand Battle?",
Military Review, July 1983, 38.
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